In a $670 billion wholesale food industry cycle that serves some 312 million people across the nation, commercial food retailers are generally at the mercy of large food distributors like Sysco and U.S. Foods. Those are the behemoth companies that have access to all the food suppliers – from farm produce to factory-farmed meat – and maintain their inventories with a distinct lack of vendor and pricing transparency for buying customers.

According to Foodem’s founder and CEO Kash Rehman, the setup saves buyers time (an average of three hours a week), and allows them to search for up to 50 items at one time, at pricing that suits their budget since all vendor prices are listed online for the buyer to compare. Sellers grow their businesses by connecting to new buyers in the area, keeping deliveries up to 15 percent more efficient as they find new buyers close to delivery routes. And the end customer benefits by obtaining fresher, more locally sourced foods, leading to a more sustainable food cycle.

“There was never a directory of distributors and you chose distributors purely from word of mouth,” Rehman said. “This is a win, win, win.”

Pakistan-born Rehman attended the University of Maryland as a business major and worked initially as a telecom consultant. Then the economic bust came and Rehman started looking into different supply chains for businesses. After a stint working with a small food distribution company, he learned the process inside out, including the inherent flaws in the system.

“Typically, a restaurant owner spends hours each week researching food sources and preparing orders, and it takes forever,” Rehman said. “He orders 10 times a month, with an average of $2,500 per order, so he can demand terms. The distributor effectively acts as a bank – rich in accounts receivables due in 30 days, but with no liquid cash available to make purchases from suppliers. So the distributor can’t really grow a sales team.”

Foodem Master List. Image Credit: Foodem.

Foodem acts as the conduit for all those food suppliers and distributors to find their wholesale customers, for a mere two percent service fee, and guarantees timely delivery of their products. But Rehman came up with another idea to keep his customers’ cash flow running smoothly.

“Restaurant owners can pay C.O.D. or ask for net 30 terms,” Rehman said. “We have another model, where we charge five percent commission, but guarantee payment to the supplier within eight days. The buyer pays by credit card, we wait eight days to make sure there are no returns and he pays within his requested 30 days. We pay the three percent credit card charge and still get our two percent service fee. We’ve never had any problem collecting.”

Rehman has tech staff working constantly on coding and algorithms to keep all information up to the minute, while providing information on promotions and analysis of changing commodity prices. There is a full time social media manager whose six-days-a-week blog goes far to spreading the Foodem word (“If you Google ‘food distribution,’ Foodem.com comes up on the first page,” Rehman said proudly). Plus he maintains a “feet on the ground” sales team and spends a lot of time at industry marketing events and shows.

Currently, Foodem serves the metro Washington, D.C. area, but Rehman wants to move into New York by next year. He has also been fielding inquiries from Canada and Israel. Rehman sees Foodem as giving small businesses their chance for a share of the market they deserve.

Kash Rehman, CEO of Foodem. Photo Credit: Foodem.

“Today, you see lots of small and mid-size farms take their produce to farmers markets, but they only sell for individual use,” Rehman said. “Many of those farms could handle wholesale quantity buying, but don’t know how to connect with those buyers. We help them find a market that works for them.”

Foodem lists suppliers for everything a restaurant needs from apples to paper napkins. He has small suppliers, who might only offer baby bok choy, and providers that supply tens of thousands of retail chain restaurants.

J.R. Paterakis is the vice president of marketing and sales and co-principal of H & S Bakery, Inc, a 70-year-old family baking business outside of Baltimore that operates throughout the Midwest and the Eastern seaboard. They supply baked goods for about 60 percent of the McDonald’s franchises on the east coast.

“We’re the number one baking distributor in the mid-Atlantic and Foodem came to us,” Paterakis said. “But being able to directly reach all of our local retail establishments lowers our commission costs considerably. With direct service delivery, it’s like the old-fashioned milkman coming to your door everyday with your milk instead of going to the grocery store. Everything is fresher.”

Paterakis also said he was happy with how “user-friendly” Foodem’s service was, something Rehman said was important to food industry people who “don’t have the time to be the most tech-savvy.”

“It’s a great business model and I think they’ll go far,” Paterakis said.